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Avalanche vs. snowball: the fastest way out of debt

7 min readUpdated June 2026

If you're carrying balances on multiple cards or loans, the worst thing you can do is spread extra payments randomly across all of them. The second-worst thing is paying only minimums everywhere and hoping the problem sorts itself out. The good news: there are two battle-tested strategies that turn a chaotic debt pile into a clear finish line.

The rule everyone agrees on: pay minimums everywhere

Before you choose a strategy, lock in one universal rule โ€” always pay at least the minimum on every single account, every month. Missed payments trigger late fees, penalty interest rates, and credit-score damage that will cost you more than any payoff strategy can save. Think of minimums as the floor. The strategy is what you do with every extra dollar above that floor.

The avalanche: attack the highest interest rate first

With the avalanche method, you list all your debts by annual percentage rate (APR โ€” the yearly cost of borrowing expressed as a percentage). You throw every spare dollar at the debt with the highest APR while paying minimums on the rest. When that one is gone, you roll its payment into the next-highest-rate debt, and so on.

Why does this win mathematically? High-interest debt is the fastest-growing debt. Every month you leave a 24% APR card balance sitting there, roughly 2% of that balance compounds against you. Eliminating it first stops the bleeding at the source.

The snowball: attack the smallest balance first

With the snowball method, you sort debts by outstanding balance โ€” smallest to largest โ€” and attack them in that order, again paying minimums elsewhere. The interest rate is irrelevant to the order.

The logic is psychological, not mathematical. Clearing a small balance in full โ€” sometimes in just a few months โ€” gives you a real win. That win creates momentum. Behavioral researchers have found that many people stick with the snowball longer precisely because they feel progress faster.

A worked comparison

Say you have three debts and $300 per month to put toward them after minimums:

  • Card A: $800 balance, 22% APR, $25 minimum
  • Card B: $3,000 balance, 17% APR, $60 minimum
  • Card C: $5,500 balance, 12% APR, $110 minimum

Your total minimum outlay is $195. That leaves $105 per month as your attack payment.

Avalanche order: Card A (22%) โ†’ Card B (17%) โ†’ Card C (12%). You'd pay off all three debts in roughly 32 months and pay approximately $1,850 in total interest.

Snowball order: Card A ($800) โ†’ Card B ($3,000) โ†’ Card C ($5,500). Same debts, same $300/month. You'd still clear them in roughly 33 months, but you'd pay approximately $2,050 in total interest โ€” about $200 more.

That $200 gap is real, and the avalanche wins it. But if the snowball's early win on Card A keeps you in the game when motivation dips, the snowball saves you more money in practice than an abandoned avalanche.

The 0% balance-transfer card: a bonus move

Some issuers offer promotional 0% APR on balance transfers for a set introductory period (often 12 to 21 months โ€” check current offers). If you qualify, transferring a high-rate balance to a 0% card can temporarily remove interest entirely from that debt, supercharging either strategy. Watch for the transfer fee (typically ~3โ€“5% of the transferred amount) and make sure you clear the balance before the promotional period ends โ€” the rate that kicks in afterward is often steep.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Opening new credit to fund a balance transfer and then spending on the original card again โ€” you've doubled your debt load.
  • Treating a debt-free card as spending money the moment it's paid off โ€” keep it at zero and redirect the freed payment to the next debt.
  • Skipping minimums on any account while focusing on your target debt โ€” the penalties and rate increases will erase your progress.
  • Quitting the strategy when something unexpected comes up โ€” a small pause is fine; just restart as soon as you can.

Which strategy should you pick?

Honest answer: the one you'll actually follow for the next one to four years. If you're highly analytical and the interest savings motivate you, use the avalanche. If you've tried to pay off debt before and stalled out, use the snowball to build momentum. Some people hybrid โ€” start snowball to get an early win, then switch to avalanche. Any consistent strategy beats none.

Use a debt payoff calculator to model your specific numbers before you commit. Seeing your exact payoff date printed out is remarkably motivating โ€” it turns an abstract problem into a countdown.

Run the numbers

Try the matching calculator โ€” free, with a Guac-AI strategy built for your numbers.